Zephyr Teachout, candidate for New York State Attorney General. (Jeff Bachner for New York Daily News)

ALBANY – State Attorney General wannabe Zephyr Teachout has touted that she does not take corporate contributions — but that has not stopped her from taking money from individuals in the financial sector.

In fact, $174,210, or more than 11.5%, of the money she raised for her attorney general run so far this year has come from those with ties to the financial sector, according to a review of her campaign financial disclosure filings.

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Four contributors gave her the maximum $21,000 donation for the primary. They are Thomas Lee, who heads his own private equity firm; Reid Hoffman, an investor at Greylock Partners, a Silicon-Valley-based venture capital firm; Vincent Ryan, founder and chairman of Schooner Capital; and Bradford Burnham, of Union Square Ventures.

Jeremy Stoppelman, the CEO of Yelp, donated $10,000 to Teachout while Jonathan Soros, a longtime liberal activist and CEO of JS Capital Management LLC, a private investment firm, gave $5,000.

She added that "Wall Street corporations want someone who will go easy on them which is why they're betting against me. It's a toxic conflict of interest to take corporate money when you're running for an office that's suppose to be investigating illegality on Wall Street."

Jack Sterne, a campaign spokesman for Letitia James, the city public advocate who is also running for attorney general, called Teachout position "the height of hypocrisy."

"What Zephyr Teachout says and what she does are exactly the opposite," Sterne said.

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Blair Horner, of the New York Public Interest Research Group, said that Teachout "created a self-imposed standard and she's following it as she sees fit. Ultimately, the voters have to decide if it's a promise kept or a promise broken."

Those close to Teachout say that 97% of her donors have given less than $200.

The Financial Times recently reported that many Wall Street executives were lining up behind another AG candidate, Hudson Valley Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney. But unlike Teachout, Maloney has not said he would reject corporate and Wall Street money even as he, too, has called for the enactment of campaign finance reforms.